politics

A Clinton Presidency

A Clinton Presidency Will Be Marked By Near-Continuous Investigations, Impeachment Risk

ZeroHedge, Nov. 2, 2016

At the start of October — when Trump’s victory odds were in the gutter and a Clinton presidency had been priced in — in a hotly debated statement, Citi’s chief political analyst, Tina Fordham suggested that the establishment may be approaching the US presidential completely incorrectly: “this is an unusual juncture but we keep looking at it through the same kinds of lenses. What if it’s all wrong because society, technology, opinion polling methods, and everything else don’t capture marginalized voters in the way they might once have?”

According to Fordham, the US presidential race felt more like an election in a developing nation where public distrust in government is high and conspiracy theories are rife. Markets seem unaware how much that low trust raises the risk of an anti-establishment vote. Fordham has focused on the Gallup World Poll on public health, which analyzes two decades’ worth of health records of Trump supporters. The numbers show a correlation between the increase in the number of people going through difficult times — as measured by suicide rates, depression, mental illness and drug addiction — and the rise in Trump’s popularity.

“This provides another useful way to think about things because income inequality is necessary but not sufficient,” she said. “There is something more subtle going on about public expectations and exhaustion and a sense of corruption, elite abuse of power, and lack of control.”

She followed up, when she predicted that the FBI’s Friday announcement «could have a meaningful impact on the presidential race» and cautioned that this may not be the end of it: «we continue to emphasize the potential for more Black Swan events emerging making things more complicated for forecasters and pollsters.»

She first analyzes if a a Clinton victory will «mean business as usual for America and the global order» and responds: «Not so fast.»

Investors should brace themselves for the new form of advanced economy political risk, what ever the outcome of the US presidential election.

First, any market relief from a victory for Mrs Clinton over Donald Trump, her Republican opponent, will almost certainly be followed by the realisation that a divided Congress will mean a return to gridlock and brinkmanship over the debt ceiling with little prospect for reform.

More broadly, following the vote in the UK to leave the EU, the rise of Mr Trump and authoritarian populism, politics in advanced economies are having what might be termed an emerging markets moment. Vox populi risk, after a wave of protests, coups and the rise of non-mainstream political parties, has become a global phenomenon. ‎

She then notes that «the economic and market implications of advanced economy political risks are more likely to become systemically significant than their emerging markets counterparts. According to the International Monetary Fund, political risk in the advanced economies has become the biggest threat to global growth.»

Specifically, she envisages the Trump campaign: From threats to jail opponents on corruption charges to the proliferation of conspiracy theories, the Trump campaign and its supporters have borrowed heavily from the EM political playbook, sowing doubts not only about his opponent’s suitability for office but also about US political institutions. A majority of Republicans now say they believe the election will be rigged.

Reverting to her notion that the US election looks a lot like that of a developing nation, she notes that «what links this advanced economy political risk with its EM cousin is low trust in institutions and elites — political and business elites, “experts”and the media. It is trust, plus belief in the future, not growth alone, that immunises the body politic against the populist virus. The collapse of trust is also evident in the sheer number of outright lies during the campaign. If everything is bogus than anything goes.»

A Clinton presidency is highly likely to be marked by near-continuous investigations as well as the risk of impeachment.

The new normal in advanced economies looks a lot like the emerging markets’ old normal, but with considerably higher stakes for the global economy.